Geography, asked by silpasubudhi1, 1 year ago

Places situated on which of the following imaginary lines experiences noon at the same time

Answers

Answered by diya29984
2
Horizontal imaginary line experiences noon at the same time
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Answered by DodieZollner
0

When describing the place, it is common to mention city, state or country as a location narrator. It is also common to talk about nearby places. Another way to describe the place is to use coordinates around the world, or reference lines to describe the full position.

Two types of fictional reference lines are used to locate positions or points and to create accurate globe and map. These lines are called latitude latitude and parallel to meridian. Two of these fictional reference lines, the equator and the major meridian are called primary reference lines because they are where we start the number system.

Equator, Hemisphere, Axis, and Guidelines

The Earth revolves around its axis daily. The North and the South Pole are two fictitious points where the axis will enter and leave the earth if the axis is the pole or the line. Halfway between the equator, the north and the south pole, is the hypothetical primary reference line drawn around the earth. Half of the Earth is the northern hemisphere north of the equator; In the south there is half the southern hemisphere. (Prefix heme- means "half"; Thus, the hemisphere means "half area".) Pole determines north and south direction. North of the North Pole is in the north in the direction of movement. South of the South Pole is in the direction of movement in the south.

Parallel to latitude

Measured in latitude degree (degree) - from 0˚ to 90˚-north or south of the equator. Latitude degree is measured from a hypothetical point in the center of the Earth. If the Earth was cut in half, then this imaginary point would be separated from the line drawn from the North Pole to the South Pole and from the equator on the other side of the Earth from the equator to the other side. A radius is the line drawn from the edge of a circle to its center. The angle between the radius lines is drawn from the equator and creates a right angle from the North Pole (or South Pole), which is 90 degrees.

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